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Journal Entries - May, 2004

May 27, 2004

Andrew, your contest prizes are on their way. I sent them by U.S. Postal Service Express Mail (insured). You should receive them in 3-4 business days. Please let me know when they arrive.

May 26, 2004

Many thanks to everyone who entered ComputerBob's 100,000th Visitor Contest. And congratulations to the winner, Andrew Pope from Wellington, New Zealand, whose screenshot showed my site's page counter displaying 100,021 visits. Andrew will receive a prize package from me containing:

  1. Two plastic 35mm film cannisters full of powdery white sand from world-famous Clearwater Beach.
  2. A 7.5-inch boxed chocolate alligator
  3. 3 beautiful Florida picture postcards
  4. A bag of assorted seashells
  5. A 6.5-inch rubber alligator
  6. A bag of bubble-gum oranges
  7. 40 full-color brochures of Florida attractions
  8. A necklace holding a prehistoric shark tooth (up to 60 million years old)
  9. An 8-inch rubber dolphin squeaky toy
  10. A miniature Florida license plate that reads "Andrew"

I plan to pack all of the prizes tonight, and then tomorrow, I'll find out how much it's going to cost to ship them to New Zealand.

May 25, 2004

After posting yesterday's Journal entry, I stayed away from visiting this site for about 6 hours, so that my visits wouldn't influence the visitor count as it neared 100,000. Last night at 9:22 PM, EST, I finally came back to check the count, and was shocked to discover that I was the 100,000th visitor! Oh, this is such a surprise! I haven't even prepared a speech! I'd like to thank my agent, my manager, my production company, my publicist, my wife, my parents, and all of the little people who made it possible.... Let's see.... Who am I forgetting?.... I'm going to wait until 9:22 tonight to close my 100,000th visitor contest, and I'll announce the contest winner tomorrow.

May 24, 2004

As I type this, this Web site has had 99,940 visitors. That means that it's going to have its 100,000th visitor in the very near future. To celebrate that important milestone, I'm going to have a little contest. No matter where in the world they live, the winner of the contest will receive a package from me, containing several fun and exciting souvenirs of The Sunshine State, including some powdery white sand from a Gulf Coast beach, a shark's tooth, some seashells, a chocolate alligator, some colorful brochures, a picture postcard, and whatever else I can think of. To enter the contest, do the following:

  1. Try to be the 100,000th visitor to this site.
  2. Take a screenshot of this site, showing the counter at the bottom of my home page.
  3. Send your screenshot to me, at my email address.

The winner will be the person whose screenshot shows my site's counter the closest to 100,000.

If you don't know how to take and send the screenshot, here's how to do it (in Windows):

  1. Scroll your browser window until my home page's counter appears on-screen.
  2. Press the PrintScreen (PrtScn) key on your keyboard. You won't see anything happen, but your computer will store a picture of the screen in its memory.
  3. Open your email program and click inside the new blank message.
  4. Click on your email program's Edit menu and choose Paste.
  5. The picture of the screen will appear in the email message.
  6. Title the email message ComputerBob's Contest.
  7. Address and send the email message to me.

I will announce the name of the winner right here on my home page. And yes, I know that many of you could easily cheat by editing the digits in your screenshot, but please don't do that.

May 23, 2004

For the third time in the past several weeks, this site is running on a different server.  About a month ago, after experiencing several serious problems with my first webhosting reseller account, I moved my account to a second webhosting provider. Even early on, there were several minor glitches in their support, but I was relatively happy with that second provider for a few weeks. Unfortunately, something happened several days ago that caused that second provider's support to suddenly go from good to virtually non-existent (pun intended). Several of their clients posted messages in their support forums, complaining about lost email, services that had stopped working, and support tickets that were being ignored. The last time I checked, the complaints had piled up for more than a week, with no replies from that second webhosting provider. Instead of waiting for the problems to start affecting my clients and me, I moved my reseller account to a third webhosting provider last night. That move went surprisingly well, without any glitches. Even though this newest provider's reseller accounts cost significantly more than similar accounts at my previous two webhosting providers, this provider's service and support have been outstanding so far. It seems that maybe you get what you pay for. I'll have to write that down for future reference. In the meantime, I have updated ComputerBob's Guide To Web Hosts to provide more details of this latest move.

May 20, 2004

Yesterday and today, I added 127 new photos to my Florida Photos section, which now contains 292 gorgeous photos of the beautiful and unique Sunshine State.

May 17, 2004

Several weeks ago, Fred Langa, author of The LangaList newsletter, wrote what turned out to be a controversial article titled, Linux's Achilles' Heel. In it, he described how he had been unable to get any version of the Linux operating system to completely work on his PC. I was fascinated with Fred's article, especially since I would like to switch to Linux some day, and because Fred's experience with it closely mirrored my earlier experience with it. Now, Fred has written a follow-up article that addresses the controversy created by his original article.

May 15, 2004

Today is my parents' Golden Wedding Anniversary. Congratulations, Mom and Dad! Your marriage has beaten incredibly high odds, and has been an object lesson in the powers of faith, patience and forgiveness. I love you both very much.

May 11, 2004

If you haven't been convinced yet, here is another reason why you need to make sure that your computer is secured against online intruders. Wired.com's disturbing article, Browser Hijackers Ruining Lives, describes how the victims of browser hijackers -- like my cousin, whose computer was recently commandeered by the CWS trojan -- could lose their loved ones, lose their jobs, and could even end up in prison.

May 8, 2004

If you're looking for the best deal you can find in U.S.A long distance telephone rates, take a few minutes to visit SaveOnPhone.com, a company that analyzes and rates more than 350 different long distance plans. The long distance plan that I had been using for years charges 4.5 cents per minute and is ranked #6 by SaveOnPhone, but I just switched to the #1 ranked plan. From now on, I'll pay only 2.75 cents per minute, with no monthly fees or minimums, which will reduce my long distance bills by almost 40%. If you make a lot of international calls, then one of the other plans may be better for you, but whatever your long distance needs are, it will probably be worth your time to check out SaveOnPhone.

May 7, 2004

If you're a regular reader of this Journal, you know that I recently spent many hours trying to rid a cousin's computer of the evil CoolWebSearch (CWS) adware/spyware trojan. If you're curious about what adware/spyware is, Wired.com has a great article that explains what it is, and includes some tips to help you protect your computer from it.

Despite its many, many domain registration features, or possibly because of them, in the past year, I have increasingly found RegisterFly's Web site to be extremely slow, buggy, and user-unfriendly, and its "Live 24/7 Support" to be either totally unavailable or disturbingly unknowledgeable and unhelpful. For example, even after a site redesign that was supposed to speed up the whole RegisterFly site, I still had to wait 45 seconds or longer for each RegisterFly Web page to load, and the site is organized into so many sub-levels that I had to view a lot of other pages in order to get to the ones that I wanted. In addition, in the past month, I tried to reach RegisterFly's "Live 24/7 Support" on 5 separate occasions, and each time, I waited almost 30 minutes for a support person to show up before finally giving up and disconnecting. In the past year, each time I've written to RegisterFly to complain, they've told me that the fixes to the problems that I reported were going to be installed "next week," but months later, the problems were still not fixed. Finally, in the past few weeks, I repeatedly found this Web site's domain name "unlocked," even after I repeatedly "locked" it on the RegisterFly site -- a huge security risk that could have allowed someone to "hijack" my domain name by transferring it to a different domain registrar without my permission. As a result of all of those problems, I no longer trust or want to do business with RegisterFly. So, even though the pre-paid WHOIS personal information protection of my domains at RegisterFly wasn't due to expire until 2007, this morning, I took a loss and transferred all of my domain registrations back to NameCheap, the fast, simple, and reliable domain registrar that I used before I switched to RegisterFly about a year ago. I will pay more for WHOIS personal information protection at NameCheap, but it will be worth it to know that my domain names are safe. And if I recently registered a domain name for you, don't worry -- I registered it at NameCheap.

May 5, 2004

My cousin and her husband ended up taking their computer to a local guy who formatted its hard drive, reinstalled everything, restored all of their data, and organized their files for them -- all for only $60. Such a deal. Afterward, we went through one more long-distance call to make sure that their computer is locked down tightly, to prevent a recurrence of the kind of trouble they had with it last week.

In the past few days, I made some changes to the features of my free webhosting service, registered a new domain name and set up a new webhosting account for a couple of my relatives, and did some more troubleshooting and system upgrades on a few people's computers. Now that things have slowed down a bit, I might find time to add some photos to my Florida Photos section.

May 3, 2004

After trying every tool and every method I could find to remove the CoolWebSearch trojan from my cousin's computer, it still returns after each reboot. Today, I told my cousin to try one final thing, and if that doesn't work, she and her husband are going to use their PC's Restore CD to reformat the hard drive and re-install Windows XP and their PC's default software applications. I hate to "give up" on a problem like this, but it has become obvious that the particular CWS variant that we've been dealing with for the past several days is more intelligent than the current crop of tools that are designed to get rid of it. The lesson appears to be that, if you find yourself in the middle of a chess game with a genius madman, sometimes the best move you can make is to tip over the table.

May 1, 2004

IMPORTANT: Now it has taken more than 30 hours in 4 days. As I suspected it might, the CoolWebSearch trojan returned to my cousin's computer after it was shut down and restarted. It appears to be either the newest or second-newest CWS variant, and unfortunately, none of the normal trojan removal methods work on it. It anticipates exactly what you're going to try to do to get rid of it, and it blocks your efforts and corrupts your removal tools. For example, the HijackThis log doesn't display any of the signs of the MadFinder variant, but CWShredder keeps finding that variant and removing it, only to have it return on the next reboot and immediately invite some "friends" to join it. The Windows Task Manager doesn't show any of the CWS applications or processes running. Regedit doesn't show any of the registry entries that are installed by any of the CWS variants, yet CWShredder keeps finding and removing 1-9 different CWS variants each time the computer is rebooted. It must not be completely removing them or they wouldn't keep coming back. The ZoneAlarm Pro firewall is still running, but it has no tray icon and doesn't appear in the Windows Task Manager. The only indication that it is running is that there are several ZoneAlarm DLLs in the Windows\System32\ZoneLabs folder that cannot be deleted because they are in use, so it appears that CWS has corrupted ZoneAlarm Pro. Norton AntiVirus recognizes that the computer is infected with CWS, but it cannot do anything to remove it, despite the fact that the Norton site says that NAV has been able to remove CWS since last March. Any attempt to even visit an antivirus site or an online scan site or a CWShredder download site causes the browser to be redirected to a porn site. When we ran CWShredder from a locked floppy disk, we got a message saying that CWS was attempting to corrupt CWShredder. This thing is really evil. Trying to get rid of it is like playing a game of chess with a genius madman.